4.5 Article

Rosiglitazone up-regulates glial fibrillary acidic protein via HB-EGF secreted from astrocytes and neurons through PPARγ pathway and reduces apoptosis in high-fat diet-fed mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY
Volume 149, Issue 5, Pages 679-698

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jnc.14610

Keywords

astrocyte activation; HB-EGF; EGFR; neuroprotective; rosiglitazone

Funding

  1. University Grant Commission (UGC), Govt. of India
  2. Council of Scientific and Industrial Research-network (miND), Govt. of India
  3. Department of Biotechnology, Govt. of India [GAP285]
  4. Science and Engineering Research Board, Govt. of India [GAP278, GAP340]
  5. UGC fellowship
  6. CSIR fellowship, Govt. of India

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The anti-diabetic drug and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma (PPAR gamma) agonist, rosiglitazone, alters astrocyte activation; however, its mechanism remains less-known. We hypothesized participation of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), known to control astrocyte reactivity. We first detected that rosiglitazone promoted glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) expression in primary astrocytes as well as the mouse cerebral cortex, associated with increased EGFR activation. Screening for EGFR ligands revealed a rosiglitazone-mediated increase of heparin-binding epidermal growth factor (HB-EGF) in astrocytes, resulting in HB-EGF release into culture medium and mouse cerebrospinal fluid too. Treatment with HB-EGF-siRNA and EGFR inhibitors showed that the rosiglitazone-induced HB-EGF and p-EFGR were interdependent, which participated in GFAP increase. Interestingly, we observed that rosiglitazone could induce cellular and secreted-HB-EGF in neurons also, contributing toward the activated EGFR-induced GFAP in astrocytes. Probing whether these effects of rosiglitazone were PPAR gamma-linked, revealed potential PPAR gamma-responsive elements within HB-EGF gene. Moreover, gel-shift, site-directed mutagenesis, chromatin-immunoprecipitation and luciferase-reporter assays demonstrated a PPAR gamma-dependent HB-EGF transactivation. Subsequently, we examined effects of rosiglitazone in a high-fat diet-fed diabetes mouse model, and supporting observations in the normal cortical cells, identified a rosiglitazone-induced GFAP, astrocyte and neuronal HB-EGF and secreted-HB-EGF in the cerebral cortex of diabetic mice. Moreover, assessing relevance of increased HB-EGF and GFAP revealed an anti-apoptotic role of rosiglitazone in the cerebral cortex, supported by a GFAP-siRNA as well as HB-EGF-siRNA-mediated increase in cleaved-caspase 3 and 9 levels in the rosiglitazone-treated astrocyte-neuron coculture. Overall, our study indicates that rosiglitazone may protect the brain, via a PPAR gamma-dependent HB-EGF/EGFR signaling and increased GFAP.

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